Anonymous wrote:I quit practicing law and became an RN at 47. The youngest person in my graduating class was 20. The oldest person in my graduating class was 53. You are not too old!
Anonymous wrote:OP I am 37 with two kids and wondering the same exact thing. I desperately want to be a nurse - but I'm so nervous to say it out loud. It would shock everyone around me, I think.
Will it take me forever to do? I have an undergrad degree with NO science courses. (I mean, I took Geology. But no physics, chem, bio, etc.)
Anonymous wrote:50 with BSN. Got RN at 45. Never too late!
Anonymous wrote:Just became a (hospital) nurse at 50 after two other careers that have nothing to do with nursing. I love it. I chose this degree in mid-life because of the vast array of career options.
I agree with most the long post by the 20-year RN, with the caveat that you can make a lot more than $80k IF you move away from bedside nursing with merely an RN. I already know several neuro and cardiac NPs at D.C.-area hospitals (from attending seminars and conventions). Their salaries are well above 80k, but of course you need additional degree(s) and certification. And years on the job -- you can't go straight thru the education and come out immediately making $$. Except maybe as a psych MNNP.
Also.... I don't know where the experienced RN has worked for 20 years but there are definitely pockets of nursing where even the plain old RNs are not robotically implementing MD orders on autopilot. These areas tend to be the elite and competitive ones (like the higher level ICUs/trauma centers) but they exist. Actually I'm humbled and a little awed by the decision-making and critical thinking required on the spot for these nurses, due to rapidly changing conditions.
Lastly, I'd encourage you to get in excellent fitness before you start your program. You'll help yourself immensely.
Anonymous wrote:I went back to school in my late 20s to get a BSN and lamented how old I was back then (I’m 40 now). I was far from the oldest in my program.
I do agree in some ways with the long PP about going into it with an open mind and realistic expectations. I was an ICU RN for 6 years and for the last 3 was working while getting my MSN. I’ve been an NP for the past 5 years.
It’s not a perfect job/career but I love it. I make a little over $100k, have a great family-friendly schedule, lots of autonomy and love 75-90% of what I do which I think is about as good as it gets.
I had/have zero interest in being a CRNA but a lot of ICU nurses go on to do that. Agree w PP that the schooling is intense and you cannot work while in school. Also very competitive to get in.
When I first started nursing school I thought I wanted to be a midwife. It did not take more than one OB rotation to relieve me of that idea. I never thought 15 years ago when I started considering it that I’d have had the jobs ive had—it’s a profession that lends itself to figuring things out as you go.